November Conservation Corner

Conservation Corner

Dark Sky Symposium - The Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society, the Sierra Club Loma Prieta Chapter, and the Sierra Club Bay Alive Campaign invite you to our symposium on dark skies and bird-safe building and lighting design. The use of LED technology and energy saving lighting fixtures are bringing with them an unintended, yet pervasive and harmful effect: the over-lighting of our nights. Learn about the biological and physical effects of light at night and strategies that can guard our health and environment while providing safe and practical lighting solutions.

Please join us on the afternoon of Wednesday, November 16, for our symposium – Light at Night: A Glowing Hazard. For more information, see here and register here.

Santa Clara County Wants to Hear Your Personal Experiences With Lehigh Cement Plant – The Lehigh Cement Plant and Quarry has been destroying the Cupertino hillside and polluting the air and water with numerous local, state, and federally recorded violations for a hundred years. In February, the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to consider options for the acquisition of the property. As part of ongoing investigations into their operations, the County is looking for public input–whether positive, negative, or neutral–to determine whether there is evidence that operation of the Lehigh Cement Plant has created a public health or safety nuisance. A direct personal experience can include, for example, your personal experience of any impacts from the Lehigh Cement Plant to the environment at or near your address, including with respect to air quality, noise, water, traffic, health, or safety.

To share your experiences, please fill out this form by 5:00 pm on Friday, October 28, 2022.


We Won! - For several years, we have persistently (and vocally) opposed the proposal by the San Jose Light Tower (AKA Breeze of Innovation) to build a monumental light pollution generator at Arena Green park, the confluence of the Guadalupe River and Los Gatos Creek in downtown San Jose. We learned that due to “environmental concerns with the riparian corridor, regulatory challenges, and air traffic noise,” the proponents of the project are no longer seeking to place it in Arena Green and are now hoping to build their “Breeze of Innovation” at Plaza de Cesar Chavez instead. We are greatly relieved and will continue to follow the project to ensure that future lighting does not harm the environment.

SCVAS endorsement of San Benito County Measure Q – If passed by voters, this ballot measure will protect agriculture and range land in the county from development and sprawl.

Cupertino Updates

  • Speak up for native habitat at a new park – The City is building a new park that will run along Saratoga Creek, Lawrence-Mitty Park, and is asking for public feedback. Although there are three designs, the designers will look at the most popular features of each. Of note, the second design (Concept B: Story Trail) has the most natural habitat of the three. Unfortunately, the designers stated that, while the immediate areas next to the creek will have native vegetation, they plan to use non-native trees in other areas. Please take the survey by Monday, October 31, with the following suggested responses.

    • Question 5: Choose “B – Story Trail” as the preferred concept

    • Question 7: Choose “As much sound wall as possible.” (The other choices will reduce the amount of habitat.)

    • Question 8: Ask the City to plant all native plants and trees that have high habitat value.

  • No illuminated signs – A new storage facility recently proposed adding two enormous illuminated signs on their buildings that would face the 280 freeway. This not only would have added to the overall light pollution of the city, but it would also have distracted motorists violating the city’s design criteria and harm the scenic corridor along the freeway. We spoke up, and the Planning Commission rejected the freeway-facing signs.

  • Wildlife protections in golf course maintenance contract – The City Council was asked to sign off on a renewal of the maintenance contract of Blackberry Farm Golf Course, which is located next to Stevens Creek and McClellan Ranch. Out of curiosity, we looked at the over 700 page document that the City Staff prepared and noticed that the new contract did not include many of the wildlife and creek protections that the previous contract had. For example, the new contract did not require workers to conduct bird nest surveys before tree maintenance during nesting season. We spoke up, and the City acknowledged the omissions and are adding our recommendations to the new contract.

October Conservation Corner

Conservation Corner

Our sponsored Light Pollution Bill, AB 2382 was vetoed by the governor. In his veto letter, the governor referred to existing (and in our opinion, grossly inadequate) building codes, cost and safety (which we believe to have been addressed in the bill as proposed). We are greatly disappointed, and will consider trying again in the future.

Read more about light pollution in this recent article in the Los Angeles Times and in this recent opinion in The Mercury News, written by Travis Longcore, a speaker at our symposium below.

SAVE THE DATE: Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society and the Sierra Club are organizing a symposium titled, “Light at Night: A Glowing Hazard,” to focus on light pollution and bird friendly design on the afternoon of November 16. You will have a chance to learn and to ask questions of the leading experts in the field! Please stay tuned.

Our friends at Green Foothills are currently accepting applications for their Leadership Program for 2023. This program is for Santa Clara, San Mateo, and San Benito County residents. The Leadership Program is an 8-month training program preparing participants for leadership roles at nonprofits, public agencies, companies, and community-based groups where they advance initiatives for environmental conservation, justice, and inclusive public processes. Scholarships are available. Application and more information.

ADVOCATES MAKE A DIFFERENCE:

Success story from Sunnyvale: Rani Fischer, our new Environmental Advocacy Assistant wrote a letter to the editor regarding light invading her home from an adjacent development. Her letter prompted the City of Sunnyvale to contact the polluter and require that lighting be projected downwards, without spilling into neighbors homes and property. Here is Rani’s letter:

Stop light pollution in Sunnyvale

Every night bright lights pour into my living room from the Fortinet building a half mile away here in Sunnyvale. I shield my eyes when I go to the kitchen to get a drink of water so that I can fall back asleep.

Since I live on the edge of a residential area that abuts office parks, the lighting ordinance (SMC 19.42.050) for residences doesn’t apply to me. The spotlights are an unjustifiable source of light pollution and waste of energy. Also, they disorient the hundreds of thousands of birds that migrate every spring and autumn as well as the insects upon which the birds feed. In humans these high-spectrum lights, especially LEDs, suppress melatonin, causing insomnia which damages neuroendocrine and cardiovascular systems, and even exacerbates cancer.

Light pollution is a dangerous problem with an easy solution. Sunnyvale should follow Cupertino and Salt Lake City and create a dark-sky ordinance.

September Conservation Corner

Conservation Corner

Important state bill to control light pollution

SCVAS is a sponsor of AB 2382, Light pollution control (authored by Assemblymember Alex Lee and joined by Senator Ben Allen) which aims to reduce light pollution on state government properties. Please watch for alerts, we may need all our members to ask the Governor to sign this bill.

Action Alert: Sargent Ranch Quarry

Comments on the Environmental Impact Report for the Sargent Ranch Quarry are due September 27. SCVAS will submit comments, and if you would wish to add your own, directions for writing comments are provided on the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band call for action (or contact advocate@scvas.org).

Rally for Juristac on Saturday, September 10th, 1:00-4:00 p.m., on the plaza in front of the County administrative building at 70 W. Hedding in San Jose.

Please consider signing the Juristac petition.

600 Trees

SCVAS submitted comments on Environmental Quality Act documents for several projects in San Jose, highlighting creek corridors, lighting and glass facades. In our most recent comment letter, we focused on a plan to kill over 600 trees in order to make room for 4 warehouses and wide sidewalks on Qume Ave. The Environmental Impact report was riddled with errors, such as the requirement for surveys for bird nests in midwinter (instead of the nesting season), and an error in tree numbering that could result in the destruction of a centuries-old valley oak tree deemed “irreplaceable”. In our comment letter, we pointed out these and other errors as well as the bad design (why should 10-ft sidewalks be prioritized over mature shade trees? Why cannot the project footprint be modified to save the trees?) and inadequate mitigation that only required planting small trees and allowed paying a fee to mitigate the tremendous loss at this site.

What is wrong with these pictures?

These trees slated to be removed to make room for a sidewalk!

This centuries-old “irreplaceable” Valley Oak tree is at risk due to clerical errors (misnumbering) and lack of proper protection over time.

Announcements

Hellyer Park Bioblitz: Join BioBlitz Club and Keep Coyote Creek Beautiful for our seasonal series of BioBlitz events at Hellyer Park in San Jose on Aug 28, 9:00 AM – 11:00 AM.

Celebrate National Wildlife Refuge Week (Oct 8 - 14) at Don Edwards SF Bay National Wildlife Refuge: Come celebrate National Wildlife Refuge Week, this year from October 8 through October 14 at the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge. On October 14, drop by the refuge to celebrate nature by exploring your creative side.

Palo Alto Foothills Park Annual Pass: Do you frequent Foothill Park? Annual passes may be purchased at the Lucie Stern Community Center on Tuesdays from 9 A.M. -5 P.M., by phone at 650-463-4900, or online. There are several discounts and free annual passes available for people who qualify.

The Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District is hiring a Conservation Biology Intern. The job will provide training in a broad range of natural resource management techniques, environmental analysis, habitats, and tools.

Valley Water 2022 Water Summit (Hybrid event): Valley Water is hosting a Water Summit on Friday, August 26, 2022, at 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., to bring together Silicon Valley leaders to discuss our current water supply challenges and how we can better partner together to find solutions.

August Conservation Corner

Conservation Corner

Alviso Hotel consumes open space and habitat

When the Topgolf project was approved a few years ago, we participated in the Environmental Review process and commented on the loss of open space and habitat. The environmental review documents for that project expressed the intent to leave 6 acres of land undeveloped, and thus rejected the need for mitigation. Now, a new project - Alviso hotel - proposes to develop those same acres. This constitutes segmentation of CEQA review (segmenting a large project to small ones to avoid analyzing and mitigating the full impact) that is not permitted by law. The CEQA documents for the new hotel also dismissed concerns for a plethora of avian species, including burrowing owls. SCVAS submitted three letters on this project to the City of San Jose and appealed the Director Hearing’s decision. We hope the project will fully compensate for the loss of open space and habitat.


San Jose Light Tower stalled

The San Jose Light Tower (AKA Silicon Valley Urban Confluence Breeze of Innovation) seems to have stalled. Efforts by the promoters to increase interest in this environmentally-obtuse project at the confluence of the Guadalupe River and Los Gatos Creek in downtown San Jose failed to capture the public’s heart and imagination, and funding seems far from the needed $150+ millions. A recent report by a technical consultant confirms our prediction that the project as proposed is not feasible in this location, and recommends that the proponents purchase land for the project instead of using public land. Recently, the proponents asked the City of San Jose to study placing this project in Cesar Chavez Plaza. It is becoming very clear that they will not be able to raise over $150,000,000 to construct this vanity project. As we continue to follow the turns and tribulation of this project, we continue to hope that the proponents will reconsider this proclaimed “gift” that takes more than it gives the San Jose community.